SINGAPORE: World stock markets tumbled Friday on growing alarm that a global recession will ravage corporate profits. In Japan, shares of Sony sank more than 14 percent after it slashed its earnings forecast for the fiscal year. In Germany, Daimler s stock dropped 11.4 percent in morning trading after it reported lower third-quarter earnings and abandoned its 2008 profit and revenue guidance. The US dollar, meanwhile, plunged below 94 yen, a 13-year low, as traders reacted to dismal US jobs data that spurred speculation the Federal Reserve might cut interest rates. The combination of the two - the yen s surge and Sony s revision - unnerved investors in Tokyo, who dumped shares of exporters like Toyota, Sony and Panasonic. Sony s news was yet another indicator that the global economy is really slowing, said Yutaka Miura, senior strategist at Shinko Securities in Tokyo. Investors remain worried over growing uncertainty about the state of the global economy, he said. Japan s Nikkei 225 stock average slid 9.6 percent to 7,649, its first close below 8,000 since May 2003. For the week, the index lost 12 percent. European markets opened sharply lower as well, with Germany s DAX falling more than 5 percent in early trading. Britain s FTSE-100 was down 3.6 percent. US stock index futures were down sharply. Both Dow Jones industrial average and Standard & Poor s 500 index futures were down more than 6 percent. On Thursday, the Dow rose 2 percent to 8,691.25. In currency trading, the dollar fell as low as 92.76 yen, the lowest since August 1995. The euro fell to US$1.2556 from US$1.2895. Dollar-selling seems unstoppable. Investors continue to dump the dollar due to ongoing worries over the slowing US economy, said Ikkou Takahashi, currency dealer at Mizuho Bank. South Korea s stock market also fell sharply as foreign investors fled the country s stock market and figures showed the economy there was slowing. The Kospi dropped 10.6 percent to 938.75, falling below the 1,000 mark for the first time in more than three years. For the week, the Kospi has fallen 20.5 percent, its worst since records began to be kept in 1987. For the year, the index is down just over 50 percent, a sharp reversal of the bull market in Korean stocks. Earlier Friday, figures showed that South Korea s economic growth slowed to 3.9 percent in third quarter, the slowest rate in three years. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng fell 8.3 percent to 12,618. Markets in India, Thailand, Indonesia and the Philippines were also down sharply as investors bailed from emerging markets around the world to cut their exposure to risky assets and meet redemption needs at home. On Thursday, key indices in Russia, Brazil and Mexico also fell. Funds are pouring out of emerging markets, said Linus Yip, a strategist at First Shanghai Securities in Hong Kong. A lot of money that flowed into the region during the last five years from the US and Europe is being cashed out. The global crisis has come to Asia. In Tokyo, dollar-selling intensified as traders reacted to bleak new numbers on the US job market Thursday that showed unemployment claims rising even faster than expected, spurring speculation the Fed might cut rates to help shore up the sagging US economy. The number of new applications for unemployment insurance rose 15,000 last week to a seasonally adjusted 478,000, above analysts estimates of 470,000. Jobless claims above 400,000 are considered a sign of recession. Electronics giant Sony Corp. plummeted 14.1 percent to 1,972 yen after it cut its annual profit and sales forecasts, blaming deteriorating sales of flat-panel TVs and other gadgets as well as the strong yen. Sony said Thursday afternoon its net profit for the fiscal year through March 2009 would likely drop 59 percent from the previous year to 150 billion yen ($1.5 billion). Previously, it had expected to post 240 billion yen ($2.4 billion) in profit for the fiscal year. Panasonic Corp. lost 12 percent and Toyota Motor Corp. shed 6.4 percent. -AP writer Shino Yuasa in Tokyo and Kelly Olsen in Seoul contributed to this report